Posts Tagged ‘San Diego’

Los Gatos real estate market

Saturday, May 15th, 2010
Town of Los Gatos, California
Image via Wikipedia

The Los Gatos homes for sale is very closely related to the trends of the greater Bay Area. Most indicators seem to suggest that the Bay Area real estate market is slowing, after a period of rapid growth towards the end of 2009. According to a February 19, 2010 article in the San Francisco Chronicle, “The Bay Area housing market lost some of its 2009 momentum in January, according to an authoritative real estate report, but prognosticators do not necessarily see a shift towards slower sales in 2010.” The piece, written by Robert Selna, continued to say that “Data analyzed by MDA DataQuick, a San Diego research firm, show that 4,853 new and resold houses and condominiums closed escrow in the nine-county Bay Area last month. That represented a decline of 38 percent from December and a 4 percent drop from January 2009.”

A February 18, 2010 article in the Contra Costa Times noted that there is mixed news facing the greater Bay Area real estate market as well as Los Gatos homes for sale. This piece found that “Bay Area home prices rose in January for the fourth-straight month on a year-to-year basis while the number of home sales dropped below what they were a year ago for the first time in 17 months. But whether the sales slowdown stems from a lower number of homes for sale due to banks holding onto foreclosed properties or cooling buyer interest is unclear.” The article, written by Eve Mitchell, continued to say that “From December to January, home sales dropped 38 percent. While home sales typically fall off between those two months, the average decline has been 28 percent, according to DataQuick records that go back to 1988.”

A February 19, 2010 article in the Mercury News presented a more positive outlook for Los Gatos real estate, finding that “…most experts interviewed said the recovery that started last year is likely to continue later this year, citing an increase in home prices in the same report and a shift to a more sustainable mix of homes on the market, with fewer foreclosures.”

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Palm Springs Real Estate

Thursday, December 24th, 2009
Palm Springs below. One minute exposure.
Image by bossco via Flickr

The Palm Springs real estate market continues to face mixed signals, although it seems that governmental intervention has nudged home sales in the right direction. According to a November 5, 2009 article in the Desert Sun, “The inventory of existing homes for sale in the Coachella Valley is the lowest since December 2005 as home sales rose 1.2 percent in September over September 2008, the California Desert Association of Realtors reported today. The median price was $159,810 in September, down from $199,810 in September 2008. Prices dropped 20 percent in September over the same period a year ago. ‘The desert median price for a single family home is now below the national median for the first time in several years when including sales in the high desert areas,’ said Greg Berkemer, executive director of the California Association of Realtors. ‘Median sale prices on the valley floor itself rank among California’s most affordable homes.’”

Palm Springs homes for sale have been faring better than the rest of the Coachella Valley, which has been declining recently. According to a more recent article in the Palm Springs Desert Sun, published on November 26, 2009, “Coachella Valley home sales fell 3 percent in September, a new report from San Diego-based MDA DataQuick shows. Sales had been rising steadily since June 2008 – after sales fell 12 percent and the median sales price stood at $300,000 – mostly because of dropping prices. September ended that sales streak. The median price rose 2 percent in October throughout the six-county Southern California region. October data are not yet available for the valley.”

Government action seems to have improved the lot for real estate in Palm Springs, according to a third article in the Desert Sun, this one by Debra Gruszecki. The piece, released on November 6, 2009, noted that “Congress sweetened the deal for house-hunters on Thursday, extending the deadline beyone Nov. 30 for first-time homebuyers to  collect up to $8,000 and beefing up the tax credit pool to include a $6,500 credit for owners of existing homes who are buying a new home. That incentive is kicking in at an opportune time in the Coachella Valley, real estate professionals said Thursday.”

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